Wolf68k

@Warlord.The tilt is pretty limited usually. It's pretty much you hold the base and push, or pull, on the top edge of the monitor, not the screen itself.

@Butters 2011 Besides doing first a system cleaning; virus, spyware, registry, chkdsk, defrag. I have no real answer for you.Maybe look into what all processes you have running and which ones you can kill.

This one is a list of programs at the top of my usage list, and was wondering if WMP is the main cause of this problem, or is there any hidden programs in that list that anyone thinks shouldn't be there?

This one is a list of programs at the top of my usage list, and was wondering if WMP is the main cause of this problem, or is there any hidden programs in that list that anyone thinks shouldn't be there?

If that doesn't solve your problem, then try virus/spyware scan in safe mode. My favorites are Malware Bytes Anti-Malware(MBAM), and Super Anti-Spyware(SAS). If you're still having problems, format and re-install Windows. Never use WMP again, run virus/spyware scans in safe mode at least once a month, and run CCleaner on your registry periodically.

Wolf68k

@ButtersWhat OS is this HP running?Judging from the other processes running it might be Windows Media Center and that might be part of the problem.

I see AVG running and I know that's part of the problem. I don't mean that AVG is causing problem with WMP (not that it couldn't be too) but that AVG is a fat, bloated pig that eats away at resources.

You've got 71 programs running. That's twice the number I use to have running when I ran XP. So yeah to me that's just way too much.Frankly I don't like in Win7 I have 53 processes running but for some reason Xfire has 3 processes to run, 1 32-bit and for some reason 2 64-bit and yet it's normal.

Kweckzilber

I see AVG running and I know that's part of the problem. I don't mean that AVG is causing problem with WMP (not that it couldn't be too) but that AVG is a fat, bloated pig that eats away at resources.

That is very right. And about the number of processes, I use Windows XP SP3 and have 33 programs running most of the time, and 71 programs is way too much, for me too. Also I see Real Networks Scheduler (realsched.exe) is running. Unlike AVG, realsched is not an essential process but eats CPU resources much like AVG (and some other AVs) does. Try removing RealPlayer.

If you want to remove realsched alone, follow these steps:

Go to task manager and end the 'realsched.exe' process

Run regedit.exe or regedt32.exe

Go to HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run

Delete any references mentioning realsched.exe

Go to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run

Delete any references mentioning realsched.exe

Navigate to C:\Program Files\Common Files\Real\Update_OB in explorer and rename realsched.exe to something else or just delete it. (I always make backups of files, even of viruses, that I remove. Also replace C:\ with your Windows installation drive)

Done. Reboot.

Note that you can also remove other startup files in this manner, without using msconfig, so that Windows will never know.

Wolf68k

Should be able to turn off that off in RealPlayer (or whatever it's called).Then again a better idea is just completely uninstall it. RealMedia files are rare these days plus there are other better media players than can play RM files anyway, like VLC and KMPlayer.

KilnerLUFC

I'm technically running on XP SP2 (Won't upgrade to SP3 for some reason), but I'm also running Vistamize, so I'm not sure how far this goes as to confusing the OS.

I knew having so many processes running was not right, but I never dare end any of the processes, as I used to do that on my old PC, and that eventually ended up dieing on me. I could Google all the processes, but is there a certain site that's dedicated to doing that for you?

Since turning my Updates back on, this problem sees to have died down abit, but as I said, it's still jumping to 100% every 10 minutes or so. Before it used to freeze the full PC, but now it just shoots up and back down. I am thinking about doing a clean of the PC and getting rid of all the programs that can just be downloaded (legally) again. I can't reformat as I never got the OS disc when I bought the PC, since it was 2nd hand.

@Kweckzilber, I will try that out, cheers.

@abottig, didn't mean to come off like that, just I was hoping for a better response. I know WMP is the culprit, but the point of the post is that it never used to be that bad.

Anyone got any more processes that could be gotten rid of on that picture? I've noticed that alot of the processes are just 'duplicates' of each other, with some having about 5 of the same processes open, but all with different memory usage.

Literally, all I have running is Firefox, WMP & AVG in the taskbar, and that's it.

*Edit* Has anyone ever used a program called "RegClean Pro"? I got a trial of it and it's telling me I have 1374 registry errors, but I'm not sure if it's lieing just so I purchase the full program.

OverTheBelow

I have an Asus EAh5770 CuCore card. Now the heatsink and fan is really clogged with dust and my mini vacuum can't get the dust coz of the plastic shield. Does anyone know how to remove it?

Some quick help would be great.

Thanks.

If you remove the cooler you'll void the warranty, remember.

@Butters: I wouldn't bother with registry cleaners unless you know exactly what they are changing or messing around with in the registry. Most of the time there will be little benefit from 'cleaning' the registry anyway.

Wolf68k

@ButtersGet CCleaner. It'll do the same job as what you're looking at and it'll also get rid of temp files and also can search for useless shortcuts and a few other things. When it cleans the registry it'll ask if you want to make a backup, tell it yes and just create folder in MyDoc and save them there. Run the reg cleaner over and over until nothing comes up as an error, and of course save the backup each time. If you get something that shows up over and over no matter how many times you try to clean it, you can right-click and set it to be excluded.

@WarlordCanned air, blow it out. Use short burst and hold the can straight up as much as possible, just be sure to never use it while the can is upside-down.

Slamman

Earlier, not sure who asked, but there was an issue with Windows rebooting updates, I noted that for Vista, MS (Microsoft)'s .NET Framework security patches was causing this in my case as well, It just stopped on it's own it appears, I got a prompt that Windows updates were installed....click here for the report (in the taskbar) and sure enough, About 5 Security updates to .Net Framework between one other update seemed to occur about two to three times in all, However, rather then a fail, all were successes, so it would seem, they could not install them more then one at a time, and as such, it's a bit more tedious then a group update, but because such programs are in use, they require a reboot to start those programs over again. (like an On Off Switch of your computer to restart everything)

coin-god

I'm having a problem with YoutTube videos, some of them lag. Even if the video is fully laoded, it lags. Like a game running at 15 fps.I never had this problem before, I have a new graphics card (raedon hd 5670) with latest drivers.

Slamman

Hard to say. Game meaning all video like cut-scenes? We suggested that perhaps you re-install Adobe Flash for any hardware changes you make, It's always likely changes in that regard cause some issues, Drivers from ATI's site? Look up any known issue with a drivers revision number too.

Edmachine

I just re-installed Windows 7 after assembling my new PC (which is very, very f*cking awesome, by the way ). But the system sounds are rather quiet. WinAmp, videos on Chrome, WMP, games are all normal. All sliders are at max. I tried googling the solution, found nothing of use. Any ideas?

Kweckzilber

See if your Subwoofer is listed in the Playback devices list Warlord mentioned. If it is, make sure it's not muted/level not zero. If it is not, change your Windows sound settings to anything that supports a Subwoofer. Realtek automatically adjusts it normally, so I don't know what exactly the problem is.

EDIT: Here is something, but I don't know if it is for your case: URL.

Ah, I enabled Loudness Equalization in the Enhancements tab and now system sounds are at normal level. But my subwoofer still doesn't work outside of Realtek's panel testing and the Windows configuration thing.@Kweckzilber: Everything is up.

EDIT: Re-installed the drivers a bit, Bass Management popped up in the Enhancements tab, enabled it and now it works. Thanks for the help!

Kriskers

Do actual HD wallpapers exist? I bought a new monitor with 1680 X 1050 resolution and I've been looking all over the web for a neat wallpaper, but no. The resoulution says 1920X1200 but the wallpaper itself is just low-detailed blob of fog. Any help where to get real HD?

Kweckzilber

Do actual HD wallpapers exist? I bought a new monitor with 1680 X 1050 resolution and I've been looking all over the web for a neat wallpaper, but no. The resoulution says 1920X1200 but the wallpaper itself is just low-detailed blob of fog. Any help where to get real HD?

Maybe your internet connection is a bit slow. On slower connections, large wallpapers appear as a blur (yes, fog), and slowly get detailed.

Wolf68k

That doesn't make a lot of sense. Internet speed will determined how fast the image loads not the quality. Now if the image was saved as progressive then what happens if that it loads in layers of detail, first is really bad, then next is better and eventually it'll completely load into full quality.

@kristjannuusPost links to some examples of what you're having issues with and we'll take a look.